- Fri Apr 15, 2016 8:28 am
#23084
Complete Question Explanation
Method of Reasoning-CE. The correct answer choice is (D)
This argument involves causal reasoning. A survey indicates that among people aged 75 to 80, people who play bridge tend to have better short term memories than those who do not play bridge. The stimulus points out that the original conclusion was that bridge assists memory, but challenges that conclusion by considering the possibility that people with better memories are more likely to play bridge.
You should realize that the argument utilizes one of the stock methods of challenging a causal argument by suggesting that the cause and effect could be reversed. That is, the study concluded that bridge playing causes memory abilities, but the stimulus mentions that memory abilities could cause bridge playing.
Answer choice (A) An argument that involves representation will involve a comparison between a sample and a population. If the argument only considers those surveyed, there is no representation error. Simply mentioning a survey in the stimulus does not mean there is any kind of representation error, and this choice is wrong. The LSAT test writers repetitively test whether you pick up on that detail.
Answer choice (B) The stimulus never concedes the study's conclusion, and never discusses therapy.
Answer choice (C) The stimulus considered the possibility that the original conclusion might be flawed, but did not assert that the conclusion was definitely wrong, so this choice is incorrect. Furthermore, it is unclear what motives the original conclusion considered.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. The stimulus proposes a reversal of cause and effect, and that is an alternative hypothesis. You should remember that it is somewhat frequent for LSAT test writers to refer to a change in causal explanation as simply a change in hypothesis or change in explanation.
Answer choice (E): This is an attractive answer choice, because the implication in the stimulus is that the study engaged in flawed reasoning. However, there is a difference between describing a flaw and actually making an alternative proposition that addresses the flaw. A description of the flaw, in this case, would involve a statement such as: "However, since the correlation of factors does not prove which of those factors, if any, is the causal element, this study may be flawed." Since the stimulus instead pointed out an actual causal alternative, the stimulus did not describe the flaw; it simply addressed the flaw.
Method of Reasoning-CE. The correct answer choice is (D)
This argument involves causal reasoning. A survey indicates that among people aged 75 to 80, people who play bridge tend to have better short term memories than those who do not play bridge. The stimulus points out that the original conclusion was that bridge assists memory, but challenges that conclusion by considering the possibility that people with better memories are more likely to play bridge.
You should realize that the argument utilizes one of the stock methods of challenging a causal argument by suggesting that the cause and effect could be reversed. That is, the study concluded that bridge playing causes memory abilities, but the stimulus mentions that memory abilities could cause bridge playing.
Answer choice (A) An argument that involves representation will involve a comparison between a sample and a population. If the argument only considers those surveyed, there is no representation error. Simply mentioning a survey in the stimulus does not mean there is any kind of representation error, and this choice is wrong. The LSAT test writers repetitively test whether you pick up on that detail.
Answer choice (B) The stimulus never concedes the study's conclusion, and never discusses therapy.
Answer choice (C) The stimulus considered the possibility that the original conclusion might be flawed, but did not assert that the conclusion was definitely wrong, so this choice is incorrect. Furthermore, it is unclear what motives the original conclusion considered.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. The stimulus proposes a reversal of cause and effect, and that is an alternative hypothesis. You should remember that it is somewhat frequent for LSAT test writers to refer to a change in causal explanation as simply a change in hypothesis or change in explanation.
Answer choice (E): This is an attractive answer choice, because the implication in the stimulus is that the study engaged in flawed reasoning. However, there is a difference between describing a flaw and actually making an alternative proposition that addresses the flaw. A description of the flaw, in this case, would involve a statement such as: "However, since the correlation of factors does not prove which of those factors, if any, is the causal element, this study may be flawed." Since the stimulus instead pointed out an actual causal alternative, the stimulus did not describe the flaw; it simply addressed the flaw.